anaheim-gazette 1932-02-04
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RAPTURE BEYOND
KATHARINE NEWLIN BURT
THIRD INSTALMENT
Fresh from a French convent, Jocelyn Harlowe returns to New York to her socially-elect mother, a religious, ambitious woman. The girl is hurried into an engagement with the wealthy Felix Kent. Her father, Nick Sandal, surreptiously enters the girl's home one night. He tells her he used to call her Lynda Sandal. The girl is torn by her desire to see life in the raw and to become part of her mother's society. Her father studies her surroundings.
Lynda visits hr father in his dingy quarters. She finds four men playing cards when she arrives. One of them, Jock Ayleward, her father tells her, is like a son to him.
Lynda says a second visit to her father and Jock takes her home, on the way stopping with her at an underworld cabaret. Jocks asks her to dance.
Jock gets into a fight with a gangster who insists on dancing with Lynda. He then takes Lynda home. Later she mentions Felix's name to Jock and Ayleward's face displays his demoniac hatred of the millionaire.
Jock tells Lynda that Felix caused him to be sent to jail unjustly by fixing up his report on a mine. Lynda says she doesn't believe his story. She pays another visit to her father and goes to a cabaret with him and dances with Jock, who suddenly stops and tells her he is going to take her right home. He had seen Felix dancing with another woman.
Felix tells Jocelyn that Jock is a worthless scamp. Later Lynda tells Jock she does not believe in his innocence but will try and find, through Felix, some letters Jock claims will room windows, this beaten man whose friends had hard faces and quick eyes. Here pain took her heart in both its hands and squeezed it. "Jock-in-the-box, Boxy." What creatures went about under such sobriquets? A hideous clamor came to her mind whose ears she tried in vain to close; "Thief! Stop, thief!
She had herself admitted these men into her mother's house with her own hands.
He had not come himself that other night. He had sent Jock. She had admitted Jock herself. He had stayed a long time. He had not been watching her while she played. He had busied his eyes elsewhere. Ehad quick eyes—Her wrist watch was gone—He had lightning ered hands—they had held her own—Kent's diamond upon them—against his face.
Now she knew what name her father and Jock Ayleward carried on the shrewd implacable tongue of the law. She knew the secret of their quick wealth, their sudden poverty. Of their hidden and sordid homes that changed and changed.
The next morning Marcella had recovered her self-possession. She came to Jocelyn's room early.
"I will take steps to discover the thief, Jocelyn, very quiet and private steps. There are reasons which you can't know... 'ah, she did know, too many reasons," why I must move very carefully. I will engage the services of a private detective. eMantine I entreat you, I command you—to say not a word, not so much as a breath about the jewels and my loss of them."
"I promise you, Mother. On my honor."
"Going in by the alley entrance." "Once, ma'am, yes. And just leaving a taxi at this block; a conspicuous woman with a big bus or tram and a full pleated skirt jacket."
Miss Jocelyn Harlowe mirror steeked her hair upon it her small felt hat ever looked paler. She came room quickly with her pants.
Marcella said "This is Mr. Catring. She has been jealous."
The horn-rimmed spotted turned and rested, shining face.
"May I search your asked her."
"Why certainly, if moths to."
Jocelyn went along merciful twenty minutes of her own room was de-stayed first to examine Mrcilla.
Mr. Catring came in and made a quick and silent of her closet, her window and her fire-escape down for some time at the with its opening into the an hour later she branched when she heard the deteive.
Jocelyn thereupon stud fiercely what must now be her wedding day.
She said to Lynda Sandie find Nick, if he is to be suave to return the She said to Jocelyn Ha you marry Felix Kent you to Ayleward and to yours
Jock tells Lynda that Felix caused him to be sent to jail unjustly by fixing up his report on a mine. Lynda says she doesn't believe his story. She pays another visit to her father and goes to a cabaret with him and dances with Jock, who suddenly stops and tells her he is going to take her right home. He had seen Felix dancing with another woman.
Felix tells Jocelyn that Jock is a worthless scamp. Later Lynda tells Jock she does not believe in his innocence but will try and find, through Felix, some letters Jock claims will clear his name.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
"And you were going to leave without a word to me? Nick was going to." "It was my plan."
"I'm sur of that. From the beginning you've tried to separate us. Can't you see how wicked that is! And how selfish. I can help him, save him."
Jock who was now on his feet stood looking down at her. "Save him—from what?" She flushed but went on bravely, "From you, Jock Ayleward. From this life of his with—you."
Jock began to move up and down the littered room. With rough hair and in his shirt sleeves he looked younger than she remembered him—so many years younger than Felix Kent. Scarred, yes, by life; but so much younger and more flexible.
The eyes in his spent face began unwillingly to flare to wide, as she told him o'her ride with Flex.
"Ask Kent about your father now. Tomorrow: Tell him about me. Put him to the test." I've already asked him about you."
"I will," her heart labored. Yes I will.
The young man turned to stone. Gray stone. He wet his lips and asked slowly, not looking at her. "Did you ask him to prove his case?"
The next morning Marcellia had recovered her self-possession. She came to Jocelyn's room early.
"I will take steps to discover the thief, Jocelyn, very quiet and private steps. There are reasons which you can't know... 'ah, she did know, too many reasons... why I must move very carefully. I will engage the services of a private detective. eMantine I entreat you, I command you—to say not a word, not so much as a breath about the jewels and my loss of them."
"I promise you, Mother. On my honor."
"Not a word to anyone, not even to Felix Kent."
Felix Kent; the name flourished in her ears with the sound of salvation. He rode life proudly with quirt and epur. knight errant. A warm current of reassurance flooded her chilled heart.
She would marry Felix Kent. At once.
She controlled her nervous sobbing and went to summon him.
Felix Kent had already left his Park Avenue apartment. She rang his office. Miss Deal's voice came with a brisk authoritative clicking.
"Mr. Kent's office, yes... Yes, indeed. Miss Harlowe... No, he's not here... He will be back... Yes, Miss Harlowe, he said positively that he would be back about noon... Why, yes, Miss Harlowe, of course, you may come here and wait for him... Why naturally, that's entirely up to you."
After a time the two women heard Kent enter the outer office.
Kent was speaking in a low hard tone and the clerk's own young voice lifted in reply piped such a tune of object cringing contrition that Jocelyn's blood came to her face in sympathy.
"What do you suppose he has done?" she whispered.
Miss Deal, unsmiling, balefully replied, "He forgot the scrapbasket."
Jocelyn threw back her head and window and her fire-escaped down for some time at the door with its opening into the leaf when she heard the deter leave.
Jocelyn thereupon studied fiercely what must now be her wedding day.
She said to Lynda Sanders find Nick, if he is to be for suade him to return the leaf.
She said to Jocelyn Hale you marry Felix Kent yet to Ayleward and to yours not fear the contents of the leaf.
And speaking in the Mrs. Felix Kent she said girls, "You must be very young you must not be afraid."
A small number of occasions had been sent out a number of invitations afterward a larger number of events went through the papers had their informal photographs.
To these matters Marc speech and movements o'had carefully attended. stood for the first and seen her wedding gown and began surprisingly to hear with gifts.
"You've giving me every she murmured late one the wedding day just ahead "except one thing what I want most."
He had been about to seize one of those lingering goings taxed her patience nad torr nerves. They were seated (h small brocaded soft) in the sofa corner and close against him.
"It's just—" the pale lifting her eyes to him fall again with a convergence or shame, "your co Felix stiffened, then closer.
"All right. You shall have you want to know? Ask me."
There fell a silence pleasantly employed, stretch touching her warm cheek whispered, "I wish—you worse than a baby!—but could tell Miss Deal that combination of your private Felix threw back her laughhed heartily and laughter of an indulgent "Little goose! What go do you?""
"No good of course: good. But—spiritually—"
CONTINUED NEXT
Why should I? To me it's proved by his word.
Then ask him to give you his correspondence with Algernon Talley during the summer of 1920.
He would have none.
And if you find the letters?
If I find even a scrap of paper that has anything to do with your case, I promise you that you shall have it. I am going now, I won't wait for Nick. I don't believe you will be cruel enough now to take him away from me. Let me go, Jock. He had seized her hands in a firm grip.
She fled from him. She heard herself laughing breathlessly as she ran down the stairs.
That night after she had finally fallen asleep with her last memory of Jock on he rind, she was awakened early by Marcella.
"The Jewels—the Jewels are gone. Got up and help me. Tell me where you've hidden them."
Her mother's hands tore her dreams to pieces, hurting her. They were trying to wring something out of her.
"Mother, Mother, please; What is the matter? What have I done?"
"My Jewels," Marcella faltered close to Jocelyn's ear. "They're not where they should be. You've taken them?"
It was spoken. Jocelyn now realized, in hope.
"I don't know anything about them, Mother."
But she was remembering her father's silent visits—the visits she had called fruitless.
She loved Nick. Even now she loved him; this knowing climber, in at bed, laughed.
At that raining of golden careless laughter, Felix became aware of her presence in the inner office, cut short his tongue-lashing and hurried to greet her.
"Jocelyn, darling, you here?"
"Yes, I tried to get you on the telephone at your apartment and then here. Miss Deal said you'd be in. I want to lunch with you."
"Splendid."
"Some quiet place, Felix."
On their way in the back seat of the limousine, Jocelyn spoke quickly. "I want to marry you sooner, Felix. How soon can we arrange it?"
He sat straight, visibly excited. "Dearest—my darling, this goes through me like lightning. How soon? Today!"
"Next week, Felix? If Mother can manage it? That's not too soon?"
He smothered her—the people on the sidewalk notwithstanding—and let her go.
"I am married to him now," thought Jocelyn. "now I am really married safely to him," and she sat there as still as a trapped mouse in her gray fur with her chin bent but with that look of somber June thunder in her eyes.
When she returned home she found a small thin man with horn rimmed spectacles, his hair very closely cut, leaning forward from the sofa toward Marcella, who, rigid and white, looked an apparition in her carved highbacked chair. The man was in the middle of a long speech. His voice lifted itself for an instant into her hearing: "It can hardly be a mistake. I think, Mrs. Harlowe she has been seen twice by two..."
The Way of Life
ONE MAN'S GUESS
New York has been so thick with gloom that we have had to carry flash-lights at mid-day. Men talk about "thirty years of bad business" and "the collapse of the capitalistic system" and "the end of the gold standard," etc.
Millions of dollars in cash are hidden in safety deposit vaults.
Since all the authorities have proved wrong, and one man's judgment is as good as another's, I venture to publish my little guess as to what is and what is not going to happen.
It has been the record of history that times of great tribulation result in the removal of great abuses.
Said Lincoln in 1864: "At the end of three years' struggle, the nation's condition is not what either party, or any man, devised or expected. God alone can claim it. Whither it is tending seems plain. If God now wills the removal of a great wrong, and wills that we of the North, as well as you of the South, shall pay fairly for our complicity in that wrong, impartial justice will find therein new cause to attest and revere the justice and goodness of God."
If the Civil War had ended quickly it would have settled nothing. It dragged through four weary years, but it abolished slavery.
If the present depression had been easily cured no good would have come of it. It is so bad, so world-wide, that it is compelling the peoples of every nation to realize the two fundamentals which were set forth convincingly in Sir George Paish's book, The Way to Recovery.
1. We are compelled to realize that the old-time insular, nationalistic thinking is out of date in a world which has been shrunk to a neighborhood. No nation can prosper unless all nations prosper. Tariffs reparations and international jealousies are shackles on trade and means less prosperity for us all.
2. If trade is once freed from these shackles, including the worst, which is international suspicion, the future has possibilities beyond our wildest dreams. The consumptive power of humanity is unlimited. Even in the most advanced nations the standard of living is still low. There are potential markets enough to keep all our resources employed, and to make all of us well to do.
I, therefore, am optimistic, not because this is a minor depression but because it is very serious, so world-wide, so packed with suffering for everybody.
Before it is finished we shall be compelled to effect international economic reforms that we never should have considered in
window and her fire-escape. He looked down for some time at the court below with its opening into the alley.
An hour later she breathed easier when she heard the detective take his leave.
Jocelyn thereupon studied cody and fiercely what must now be done before her wedding day.
She said to Lynda Sandal, "You must find Nick, if he is to be found, and persuade him to return the Jewels."
She said to Jocelyn Harlowe, "Before you marry Felix Kent you must prove to Ayleward and to yourself that you do not fear the contents of that safe."
And speaking in the character of Mrs. Felix Kent she said to both these girls, "You must be very careful and you must not be afraid."
A small number of church invitations had been sent out, an even smaller number of invitations to a breakfast afterward, a larger number of announcements went through the mails and the papers had their information and their photographs.
To these matters Marcella, with speech and movements o fa marionette, had carefully attended. Jocelyn had stood for the first and second fingers of her wedding gown and the apartmen began surprisingly to her to fill itself with gifts.
"You've giving me everything. Felix she murmured late one evening the wedding day just sixty-two hours ahead "except one thing and that is what I want most."
He had been about to say good night, one of those lingering good nights that taxed her patience and tormented all her nerves. They were seated together on th small brocaded soft. Felix sat back in the sofa corner and held Jocelyn close against him.
"It's just—the pale girl faltered, lifting her eyes to him and letting them fall again with a convent child's timidity or shame, 'your confidence.'
Felix stiffened, then drew her even closer.
"All right. You shall have it. What do you want to know? Ask me for a secret.
There fell a silence which Felix pleasantly employed, stroking her hair, touching her warm cheek. Jocelyn whispered, "I wish—you will think I'm worse than a baby!—but I do wish I could tell Miss Deal that I knew the combination of your private安全."
Felix threw back his head and laughed heartily and tenderly, the laughter of an indulgent elder.
"Little goose! What good would that do you?"
"No good of course: No practical good. But—spiritually—"
CONTINUED NEXT WEEK
Fire Prevention Drive Effective
2. If trade is once freed from these shackles, including the worst, which is international suspicion, the future has possibilities beyond our wildest dreams. The consumptive power of humanity is unlimited. Even in the most advanced nations the standard of living is still low. There are potential markets enough to keep all our resources employed, and to make all of us well to do.
I, therefore, am optimistic, not because this is a minor depression but because it is very serious, so world-wide, so packed with suffering for everybody.
Before it is finished we shall be compelled to effect international economic reforms that we never should have considered in prosperous times.
And when we do get business going again our prosperity will amaze us.
California Taxpayers' Association Demands Drastic Tax Retrenchment
Labels Any Move to Increase Public Indebtedness or Revenue as "Unnecessary and Unwarranted"; Says Government Exists For Welfare of People in Resolution Passed Last Week
California Taxpayere' association, which is making an exhaustive study of state-government in California this week branded any future additions to tax burdens as unnecessary and unwarranted. When its executive committee adopted the following resolution:
Whereas, taxation, caused by the increasing cost of federal, state and local governments, has resulted in an irreplaceable burden upon the people and stands as a major factor delaying the return of normal industrial development and.
Whereas, the world-wide economic depression has caused the earnings of the people to be reduced from 20-25 percent, and
Whereas, increasing cost of government has developed beyond the ability of the public to support and has been financed through increased taxes and exhaustive use of public credit (bond issues) insuring future tax burdens, and all private organizations and individuals are reducing their costs.
Whereas, the people do not exist for the welfare of government, but government is established for the welfare of the people, and
Whereas, there is a continued effort on the part of uninformed and badly advised groups to seek upward extension of an already burdensome taxation, and
Whereas, after careful study and investigation we find that there are many unnecessary functions and duplications in state, county and municipal governments, in which drastic reductions can are shackles on trade and means less prosperity for us all.
Film Experiment Planned by S.C.
"Montezuma's Daughter" Will be Screened and Studied by Experts
A motion picture based on early Mexican history entitled "Montezuma's Daughter" is to be developed this spring as a "project" of a recently-organized experimental cinema laboratory of the University of Southern California. It will be in charge of Dr. Boris V. Morkovin, a member of the advisory board of t he national committee for the study of social values in motion pictures established by the Payne foundation of New York.
Prof. Morkovin has been lecturing on the social and psychological aspects of the films at University College of S.C. for two years, stressing the scientific, educational, historical, and artistic possibilities of motion pictures. It is clear, he states, "that educational institutions and society cannot remain aloof and different to such a powerful instrument of social control and influence as the photoplay, which affects and shapes the minds of adults, adolescents, and children everywhere in the world as possibly
Fire Prevention Drive Effective
Campaign Last Year in National Parks, Schools Reach 50,000 People
To awaken the people of California to a realization of the need of care with fire, the United States Forest service and the state division of forestry in 1931 conducted a cooperative stop forest fires campaign in the mountain camps, resorts, and towns from Lake Tahoe north to the Oregon line and in the Mono and Inyo country east of the Sierra. A special truck equipped with an electric generator and motion picture projectors was used in presenting fire prevention programs consisting of illustrated lectures and motion pictures. Shows were given in 82 places to a total of 8,545 people.
Earlier in the season fire prevention programs were given in the high schools of the San Francisco bay region and towns of the coast counties as far south as Santa Maria. A total of 159 shows were given during 1931, before 52,710 people of which 44,165 were high school students. The stop forest fires campaign will be continued this year in Southern California.
ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS—Music, Drama, Dance, SPECIAL FEATURE: Sight-reading classes. 422 W. Center St. Phone 4812.
Tune in KFI every Tuesday morning. 10:00 and hear National Lead Co. of Calif. (Rass, Hunter Paints) "Home Beautiful" department program on "Color Harmony." Phone 2708 for details.
Whereas, the people do not exist for the welfare of government, but government is established for the welfare of the people, and
Whereas, there is a continued effort on the part of uninformed and badly advised groups to seek upward extension of an already burdensome taxation, and
Whereas, after careful study and investigation we find that there are many unnecessary functions and duplications in state, county and municipal governments, in which drastic reductions can should be made and the cost of these governments so reduced as to bring the expenditure of the governments well within present income.
Be it resolved, that California taxpayers' association does therefore maintain that any further additions to the tax burdens in this state are unnecessary and unwarranted, and
Be it further resolved, that it is vital that all tax spending bodies commit themselves to a policy of drastic retrenchment, and
Be it further resolved, that not only the increase in governmental expenses must be halted, but that a drastic reduction in governmental expenditures must be effected in order that the burden may be reduced; property rights may be protected; prosperity revived; and the welfare of all people safeguarded."
Avocado Growers Inspect S.D. Orchards
Completion of plans for a tour of inspection to the avocado groves of San Diego county on Friday, February 5, is announced by Farm Advisor Harold E. Wahlberg. This tour will afford those attending an opportunity to observe at first hand a cross-section of the avocado industry in our neighboring county and to meet some of the prominent growers there. Particular attention will be given to the methods for compatting disease and insect posts, although cultural practices, types of planting and varieties will also be shown and discussed.
Prof. Morkovin has been lecturing on the social and psychological aspects of the films at University College of S.C. for two years, stressing the scientific, educational, historical, and artistic possibilities of motion pictures. It is clear, he states, "that educational institutions and society cannot remain aloof and different to such a powerful instrument of social control and influence as the photoplay, which affects and shapes the minds of adults, adolescents, and children everywhere in the world as possibly nothing else in the history of civilization has done.
The claim that in over-commercialization the motion picture industry has sometimes abused this significant instrument and perhaps inflicted considerable social harm should be an additional incentive for social and educational institutions to take the initiative in the new dinema movement. More negative attitudes are not sufficient; constructive methods of seeking and finding new ways are dictated by the scientific spirit of the era.
We feel that there is no location more favorable for the crystallization of these ideas than in Los Angeles. We plan, therefore, to proceed from the theoretical to the experimental."
Dr. Morkovin has enlisted the assistance of several Hollywood studios, professors of history, architecture, English, physical education, music, and anthropology; Mr. Francisco Guate, an Azete Indian; research assistants in the Trojan liburry; and students of his classes at University College.
Lions Directed On Imaginary Journey
Members of the Anaheim Lions club this week recalled the imaginary trip at Elks clubhouse when motion pictures of the International Pacific highway from Fairbanks, Alaska, to Buenos Aires, Argentina. A.P.M. Brown was in charge of the program.
Superfluous Hair
Permanently Removed
MRS. F. A. SCOTT
Electric Needle Specialist
30 Years Experience
Phone Tucker 6058
710 Loew's State Bldg., 7-Eroadway
Los Angeles, Calif.
666
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Most Speedy Remedies Known.
BOWELS
need watching
Let Dr. Caldwell help whenever your child is feverish or upset; or has caught cold.
His simple prescription will make that billious, headachy, cross boy or girl comfortable, happy, well in just a few hours. It soon restores the bowels to healthy regularity. It helps "break-up" a cold by keeping the bowels free from all that sickening mucus waste.
You have a famous doctor's word for this laxative. Dr. Caldwell's record of having attended over 3500 births without the loss of one mother or baby is believed unique in American medical history.
Get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepa from your drugstore and have it ready. Then you won't have to worry
RELIEF
From Headaches,
Colds and Sore Throat
Neuritis, Neuralgia
Don't be a chronic sufferer from headaches, or any other pain. There is hardly an ache or pain Bayer Aspirin tablets cannot relieve; and they are a great comfort to women who suffer periodically. They are always to be relieved upon for breaking up colds.
It may be only a simple headache, or it may be neuralgia or neuritis. Rheumatism. Lumbago. Bayer Aspirin is still the sensible thing to take. Just be certain it's Bayer you're taking; it does not hurt the heart. Get the genuine tablets, in this familiar package.
SAFE
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
PRINTING
Commercial Social
Our Printing Plant is the best equipped in Anaheim for all kinds of commercial social printing.
His simple prescription will make that billious, headachy, cross boy or girl comfortable, happy, well in just a few hours. It soon restores the bowels to healthy regularity. It helps "break-up" a cold by keeping the bowels free from all that sickening mucus waste.
You have a famous doctor's word for this laxative. Dr. Caldwell's record of having attended over 3500 births without the loss of one mother or baby is believed unique in American medical history.
Get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin from your drugstore and have it ready. Then you won't have to worry when any member of your family is headachy, billious, gassy or constipated. Syrup Pepsin is good for all ages. It sweetens the bowels; increases appetite—makes digestion more complete.
Dr. W. G. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor's Family Laxative
PRINTING
Commercial Social
Our Printing Plant is the best equipped in Anaheim for all kinds of Commercial and Social orders Business Stationery and Cards, Bank Forms for office uses, Wedding Stationery, Calling Cards, Personal Stationery for Men and Women.
It will be worth your while to get our estimates.
Anaheim Gazette Phone 2414 103 No
Westinghouse Radio FEARN Easy Parking 273 E. Center St., Anaheim Phone 3411
A. B. C. BUSINESS DIRECTORY
For Quick Reference Look Under Alphabetical Classification of the Business or Profession You Are Seeking. You'll Find This Anaheim Gazette Business Directory Reliable, Convenient and Profitable. USE IT.
BIG AUCTION
Every Saturday at 2 and 7:30 p.m., at Jack Martin's Auction House, 137 S. Lemon, Phone 3220.
Private sales all the time
For Cash or Easy Terrains.
Buy Anything—Sell Anything
"The Bargain Spot of Orange Co."
Jack Martin, Prop.
IRISH AUCTIONEER
Funiture—Used
J. P. Glenn
124 W. Wilshire, Fullerton 61
Optometrists
Dr. Loerch Jr..
222 N. Broadway, Santa Ana 2884
Paint Business
Fullerton Paint & Paper Co.
212 N. Spadra, Fullerton 477
Physicians & Surgeons
Automobile Wrecking
Curran Auto Wrecking Co.
L. A. at Palm, Anaheim 3101
Battery Business
H. D. Hushman, Willard Batteries,
419 W Center St., Anaheim 3503
Chiropractors
The Plinters, Chiropractors
108 E. Broadway, Anaheim, Ph. 3413
Funeral Directors
Ambulance Service—Day or Night Phone 3809
DR. OSHER
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Dentist—Painless Extraction, Oculist—Glasses Edited.
Automobile Wrecking
Curran Auto Wrecking Co.
L. A. at Palm, Anaheim 3101
Battery Business
H. D. Hushman, Willard Batteries,
419 W Center St., Anaheim 3503
Chiropractors
The Pintlers, Chiropractors
108 E. Broadway, Anaheim, Ph. 3413
Funeral Directors
Ambulance Service—Day or Night
Phone 3209
Backs,
Terry & Campbell
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
H. P. CAMPBBLL,
Resident Director
381 No. Lemon St., Anaheim, Calif.
DeLuxe Ambulance Service
Telephone 4105
HILGENFELD'S
FUNRAL HOME
South Lemo at Broadway
Anaheim, California
Physicians & Surgeons
Phone 3212 Open Evenings
Sunday by Appointment
DR. OSHER
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Dentist—Painless Extraction.
Oculist—Glasses fitted.
107½ E. Center St., Anaheim, Ca.
Office Phone 3213
Residence 887 S. Los Angeles St.
Residence Phone 2010
Hours: 11-12; 2-4; 7-8
J. W. Truxaw, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Golden State Bank Brig.
Cor. Center and Los Angeles St.
Anaheim, California
Snash and Doors
Nagel-Gohren & Co.
418 S. Lemon St., Anaheim 2503
Used Cars
Glen A. Peck, Used Cars.
333 W. Center, Anaheim
ANAHEIM FEED AND FUEL CO.
Dealers in
GRAIN
FLOUR
SEEDS
WOOD
COAL
HAY
Phone 3210
W. D. GRAFTON, Prop.
Public Weighing Scales